1
CALANDRELLA BRACHYDACTYLA.
Short-toed Lark.
Alauda brachydactyla, Leisl. Ann. d. Wetter. Gesell., tom. iii. p. 357, tab. 19.
— arenaria, VieiU. Faun. Frang., p. 169, tab. 74. figs. 1, 2.
— pispoletta, Pall. Zoog. Rosso-Asiat., tom. i. p. 526.
— calandrella (Bonap.), Savi, Orn. Tose., tom. ii. p. 67.
Melanocorypha itala, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl., p. 311.
— brachydactyla, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl., p. 311.
arenaria, Bonap. Geog. & Comp. List of Birds of Eur. and N. Amer., p. 38.
Calandrella brachydactyla, Kaup, Natürl. Syst., p. 39.
Phileremos brachydactyla, Keys, und Bias. Wirbelth. Eur., p. 37.
T h a t a species of Lark so common on the continent of Europe, and so abundant in all eastern countries,
from Palestine to China, as the Calendrella brachydactyla should have been taken in the British Islands need not
excite surprise; we ought rather to be astonished that, instead of having been met with only once, it has
not been more frequently seen ; indeed, when we remember the extent of our island, and how few are the real
observers of our native birds, we may very reasonably suppose that many other examples have, from time to
time, visited us without their differences from the other members of the family having been detected. “ At
the end of October 1841,” says Mr. Yarrell, “ I received a letter from Mr. H. Shaw, of Shrewsbury, informing
me that an example of the Short-toed Lark had been caught in a net near that town on the 25th of the same
month ; and shortly afterwards he very obligingly sent the specimen up to me for my examination.
“ This species, having some resemblance to our Wood-Lark, is yet immediately to be distinguished from it by
its stouter beak, its nearly plain unspotted breast, and its very short hind toes and claws from which last
peculiarities it has received its name. The whole length of the Shrewsbury specimen was five inches and
three quarters; the tarsal bone three quarters of an inch; the hind toe half an inch, the claw of it only one
quarter of an inch ; the wing, from the carpal joint to the end of the longest quill-feather, three inches and
a half; the second quill-feather the longest in the wing, the first and third feathers a little shorter; the tertials
extend backwards as far as the end of the closed wing.” ;
As I have never had an opportunity of becoming personally observant of the habits of the Short-toed Lark,
I must, in order to make my readers acquainted with them, draw somewhat largely upon, the writings of
others; and this, with due acknowledgment, I accordingly shall do.
Temminck states that is very abundant in Sicily, in the kingdom of Naples, in Spain, and in Italy, and
that it is equally numerous in the central parts of France, and along the shores of the Mediterranean, but
not in the north of France nor in Holland; Bailly that it is found in Piedmont, but not in Savoy. Polydore
Roux includes it in the birds of Provence; and Brehm in those of Germany, which appears to be the
boundary of its range northwards. Temminck further states that it migrates to the continent of Africa; and
Loche informs us that it is found oyer the whole of Algeria. Mr. Salvin remarks that in the Eastern Atlas it is
“ much more local in its distribution than the Crested Lark ( Galerita cristatd), its range being confined to
a few favoured spots in the elevated plains. About Ain Beida it is abundant, and throughout the great
plain of El Tharf it may be commonly met with ; it also occurs in the neighbourhood of Djendeli. Like the
rest of its congeners, it places its nest on the sheltered side of a bush—the scrubby vegetation which clothes
the whole of that arid district affording the necessary protection for its offspring. The eggs of this species
vary very much ; even in the same nest hardly two similar ones are to be found. So different were some of
the varieties, that the greatest care was requisite in identifying their true parentage.” In his notes ‘ On the
Ornithology of Northern Africa,’ the Rev. H. B. Tristram s a y sMa n y flocks occur in winter m the
neighbourhood of the oases, and on the northern limits of the Sahara. It breeds abundantly under the
slopes of the Atlas, but not, so far as I am aware, in the Desert. It is extremely local in the choice of its
breeding-places. Confined to the barren salt-plains in the steppes on the verge of the Desert, where the
vegetation is very scanty, its nest seems to be invariably placed under the lee of a thyme-bush, in a depression
much deeper than the nests of other Larks.”
Mr. E. Cavendish Taylor says that in Egypt, where it is mostly met with in small flocks, it is not to be
seen before March. Mr. Chambers shot it in Tripoli, and Mr. C. F. Tyrwhitt Drake observed it on the
plains of Tangier and Eastern Morocco.
Dr. Henry Giglioli, in his account of the birds observed by him in the neighbourhood of Pisa, mentions
that “ in spring large flocks appear, especially along the sea-shore, near the Gombo.